The current executive director is sociologist Liz Meléndez.[2]
History
CMP Flora Tristán has been connected with the advancement of women's rights in Peru since its founding in 1979. It was named in honor of French-Peruvian socialist writer and activist Flora Tristan. Its founders include the feminist sociologists Virginia Guzmán Barcos, Narda Henríquez [es], and Virginia Vargas.[3][4][5] The latter served as the organization's coordinator, and later as its director until 1990.[6]
The cartoonist Marisa Godínez joined in 1980, before they established their first site at Quilca, to run publication and create visual elements for promotion for the organization.[7]
The jurist Giulia Tamayo León [es] was responsible for the legal assistance program for defense of victims of gender violence, including violence and sexual exploitation against minors. She was also the center's director from 1994 to 1996.[8]
In 2004, on the occasion its 25th anniversary, the center organized the national seminar "25 Years of Feminism in Peru", analyzing the evolution of the feminist movement and creating a strategy for working to advance public policies.
Objectives
The organization develops strategies for research, training, advice, communication, legal and health services, as well as the dissemination of information. It conducts specialized training, in addition to promoting and participating in the formulation and negotiation of public policies to advance women's rights.[9]
Among the programs it has developed are the Feminist Studies and Debate Program, research on femicides in Peru – in which the organization was a pioneer – the prevention of violence against women, and the empowerment of women in economic and political spaces.[10] It also promotes the campaign to prevent, punish and eradicate political harassment against women.[11]
Tristan, Flora (2007). El tour de Francia [The Tour of France] (in Spanish). Translated by Westphalen, Yolanda. Lima.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^Trevizan, Liliana (2001). "Virginia Vargas". Notable Twentieth-century Latin American Women: A Biographical Dictionary (1st ed.). Westport, Conn. [u.a.]: Greenwood Press. pp. 287–291. ISBN0-313-31112-9.
^Tompkins, Cynthia; Foster, David William, eds. (2001). "Virginia Vargas". Notable Twentieth-century Latin American Women: A Biographical Dictionary. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 287–289. ISBN9780313311123. Retrieved 12 August 2021 – via Google Books.